This year Adil Hussain was seen personification a frustrated, busy son to a father who is desperately seeking shelter in critically-acclaimed Mukti Bhawan. Next, he will be seen in Rajinikanth’s much-awaited 2.0 and Neeraj Pandey’s Aiyaari.

The 54-year-old actor says like any other artiste, he takes adult some projects to compensate his bills and some to prove his middle voice. In an talk with PTI, Hussain says, “Aiyaari and 2.0 are those small, little roles that I’m doing to compensate my bills. Films like Mukti Bhawan don’t compensate me. So we have to arrange of change it – some for bill, some for dil (heart).”

The actor, who won a National Award (Special Jury Mention) this year for a Shubhashish Bhutiani- destined movie, says after constantly operative in films for over 8 years, he is in a good headspace right now, prepared to persevere some time to his initial passion — theatre. Adil Hussain’s subsequent entertainment plan will be a one-man act narrating a crux of a Bhagavad Gita. He will play both Krishna and Arjuna with casting executive Dilip Shankar, with whom a actor has progressing worked in films such as The Reluctant Fundamentalist and Life of Pi.

The actor says, “I’m prepared to take a plunge. But, hands down, it will be a large change from being a idle film actor on a sets to theatre. I’ll have to retrain myself to go behind to a medium. But somehow we have managed to make myself gentle with it. It’s my training that helps me switch on and switch off.”

He has been a sought-after name in Assamese, Bengali, Tamil, Marathi and Malayalam films. But it was usually in 2012 when he shot for a Bengali film Sunrise that Hussain stopped worrying about being a good actor. “With any purpose we used to be unequivocally stressed compartment 2012. we felt we had to do good. So my clergyman in Puducherry said, ‘I know you’re good though that’s not enough, is it?’ we answered in certain and asked him how to go over that.”

The actor pronounced being loyal to a qualification rather than being good during it helped him overcome his fear. “Why didn’t we try it before? It’s like you’re jumping off a precipice and there are usually dual possibilities – we die or we fly. So that has been function given we did a play and a film ‘Sunrise’ – we had no idea. The weight of being good has left my shoulders usually recently.”

Hussain will be seen in an heated film, Love, Soniya, that stars Lion child actor, Sunny Pawar and Freida Pinto. The actor also has Deb Medhekar’s directorial entrance Bioscopewala, that is a complicated instrumentation of Rabindranath Tagore’s ‘Kabuliwala’ with maestro actor Danny Denzongpa in a pretension role.

“I play Mini’s father in a film. It’s a impression desirous by photographer Prabuddha Dasgupta,” he says.